Word: court
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...have been engaged in Juvenile Court work are as follows...
...following men have been placed in charge of the various buildings: Apley Court--42, R. M. Lord '15; 44, E. Newton '15; Apthorp--5, W. Tufts, Jr., '13; Beck--45, A. W. Josephs '14; Brentford--46, C. M. Makepeace '13; 53, J. M. Graham '15; Claverly--1, A. M. Goodale '13; Craigie--101, G. A. Ernst '12; 502, J. D. Adams '13; Dana Chambers--37, J. A. Henderson '14; 44, W. Cutler '13; Drayton--1, H. A. Friedlich '15; Dunster--31, E. D. Curtis '14; Fairfax--45, W. T. Fisher '13; Grays--16, L. O. Wright...
...difficult to prevent men not members of the University from using the courts under the present system by which they are allotted. This is not the only fault of the haphazard arrangement however. At present if all the courts are in use men wander over the field to find out which court will first be vacant. One pair of players may spend ten minutes looking at the time boards and have to wit half an hour for a court, while another pair, more fortunate, may find the first court they strike available in ten minutes. In the long run, luck...
...squad will leave Harvard square at 12.30 o'clock, taking the 1.15 o'clock train from Trinity Court...
...legislature of New York State recently passed a workman's compensation act, a much needed measure, which the highest court threw out as unconstitutional. In doing this, the court exercised a legislative function, a power which the courts of no other country attempt to exercise. It is in these cases where the judiciary and the legislature clash, that Mr. Roosevelt wishes the decision submitted to the people for their final arbitration...